Tracy Reese: Fashion race issues on and off runway

Tracy Reese (Courtesy Photo)
Tracy Reese (Courtesy Photo)

NEW YORK (AP) — Diversity on the runway is only part of the race problem in fashion, said Tracy Reese. There’s plenty to be done behind the scenes as well, she said.

Reese, a rare Black female designer at New York Fashion Week, sees no one solution.

“There’s so many things that need to change. There are a lot of designers of color but I think there’s just a dearth of designers out front,” she said Sunday as she dashed from runway walk-through to makeup re-touches for one of her models Sunday at a space in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood.

“Some of that is finance. But I think by saying that diversity is beautiful, that is a beginning, to look at all people and to see the beauty in each of us and their value is a very strong beginning. It’s important to keep the conversation going, then people will start to broaden their vision.”

 Fashion from the Tracy Reese Fall 2014 collection is modeled, during New York Fashion Week on Sunday, Feb. 9, 2014, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Fashion from the Tracy Reese Fall 2014 collection is modeled, during New York Fashion Week on Sunday, Feb. 9, 2014, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

During September’s Fashion Week, supermodel Iman joined Naomi Campbell and veteran modeling agent Bethann Hardison talking loud and clear about race and runways.

They launched Balance Diversity, an effort to boost the number of Black models. And they named names, calling out Donna Karan, Proenza Schouler, The Row, Victoria Beckham and Calvin Klein as among those who used nearly no Black models the previous February.

The website Jezebel calculated that 82.7 percent of that season’s New York Fashion Week models were White, 9.1 percent were Asian, 6 percent were Black and 2 percent Latina.

 Fashion from the Tracy Reese Fall 2014 collection is modeled, during New York Fashion Week on Sunday, Feb. 9, 2014, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Fashion from the Tracy Reese Fall 2014 collection is modeled, during New York Fashion Week on Sunday, Feb. 9, 2014, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Reese, known for diverse runways, said she mentors up-and-comers of all colors, including Black women.

“Quite a few Black women have interned for us over the years. I’ve hired a few of them on our team. That’s important, too, to keep talking to young people and let them know what the possibilities are in the industry,” she said.

But it’s not all about the runway.

“There are so many amazing jobs in the fashion industry as a whole. It’s not all about design,” she said. “We need great PR people of color, for one. That’s a very non-diverse group. It’s all facets of the industry that have to be addressed.”

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Follow Leanne Italie on Twitter at https://twitter.com/litalie

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